Disaster has struck - hard on the heels of the COVID-19 pandemic, another disease outbreak has hit your fair city, Malleith. Residents are outraged and worried. There have already been 10 deaths.
The cause of the outbreak appears to be methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA). (Please refer to the CDC MRSA Fact Sheet for more information about the pathogen.)
Figure 1: False-coloured scanning electron microscopy (SEM) image of MRSA cells. Image credit: CDC
Each member of your group will play one of the following roles as you attempt to tackle the disease outbreak and save your city:
You must work together, using the information that has been provided for you in the attached information packets, and decide what action(s) should be taken to control the measles outbreak currently plaguing your city, Malleith. Your actions should be evidence-based – use the peer-reviewed literature to decide on measures that will stop the pandemic in your scenario.
Your action points may include directives to gather more information (e.g., contact tracing of current cases, microbiological testing of food/water, etc.), or specific directives (e.g. public health measures, non-pharmaceutical interventions, etc.). Use the data/expertise of all group members. Be clear, concise, and specific.
You should submit 3-5 specific actions to control the pandemic, using the workshop 3 pro forma (available on MyPlace). Submit this by noon, Friday March 10th, via the submission link on MyPlace.
You are the provost of Malleith, elected in 2016.
Figure 2: Photograph of Malleith city centre. Image credit: DALL-E
The current population of Malleith (as of December 2022) is 164697. The demographic data for the city is shown below.
Figure 3: Malleith demographics (Source: Office for National Statistics)
You were elected as a member of the popular “Freedom and Green” party and made a number of election promises regarding a “Green New Deal” for Malleith.
Figure 4: Voting intention by Malleith residents (Source: YouGov polling)
There are currently 38 elected councillors, representing the 5 main political parties in Malleith as follows:
| Political Party | Number of Seats |
|---|---|
| New Progress | 3 |
| Social Change | 10 |
| Freedom and Green | 18 |
| Purple | 6 |
| Thistle | 1 |
The overall budget (expenditures) for the 2021-2022 financial year is £401192656. A summary of expeditures by category for this financial year is shown below.
Figure 5: Public expenditures by category for the 2021-2022 financial year (Source: Malleith City Council)
Your office has recently received a great deal of correspondence regarding the pandemic in Malleith. A representative sample of these e-mails is shown below.
From: att_95482@gmail.com
To: provost@Malleith.co.uk
Cc:
Subject: This Bloody Pandemic
Dear Provost,
I am upset to hear about this new pandemic in Malleith. This seems to be too much to bear on top of COVID, the cost of living crisis, and the war in Ukraine. It is just one tragedy after another.
I hope that your office is going to do something about tragedy immediately.
All the best,
Rodrigo
From: lulu_45084@gmail.com
To: provost@Malleith.co.uk
Cc: city-council@Malleith.co.uk
Subject: Pandemic Disaster for Businesses
Dear Provost,
This new pandemic in Malleith has the potential to ruin our businesses. I run a bookshop on the high street and virtually had to shut our doors during COVID due to COVID.
Things are bad enough already with the cost of living crisis, war in Ukraine, and Brexit, we can’t afford another pandemic.
I hope very much that your office is going to do something about dreadful state of affairs at once, keeping in mind the economic interests of businesses in our city and the fact that we cannot afford restrictions that cripple our businesses.
Kind regards,
Wilson (Fraser & Co., proprietor)
From: gldk_42027@gmail.com
To: provost@Malleith.co.uk
Cc: city-council@Malleith.co.uk
Subject: New Pandemic Measures
Dear Provost,
I fear that you and your office are going to use this new pandemic as yet another excuse for government overreach into citizens’ lives. The mental health consequences of the last pandemic were underappreciated, but very real - people suffered due to the lockdowns and children’s development was affected by the wearing of face masks and the closing of schools.
Facemasks are just the tyranny of the minority over the majority, I hope that you will not permit them again on your watch.
All the best,
Eleanor (a concerned voter)
From: oirl_91044@gmail.com
To: provost@Malleith.co.uk
Cc: city-council@Malleith.co.uk
Subject:
Dear Provost,
I have just learned that my my sister-in-law has passed away due to the new pandemic in Malleith. This is especially terrible coming hard on the heels of all of our losses due to COVID-19.
You cannot begin to imagine the grief that we are feeling.
I hope that you will do everything you can to stop this pandemic so that no more lives will be lost.
Yours truly,
Alise
As Provost of Malleith, you are of course familiar with the work of the Standing Committee on Pandemic Preparedness, the UK Pandemic Preparedness plan, and the latest COVID-19 health protection guidance released by Public Health Scotland.
You are a representative from Public Health Scotland, sent to Malleith to help with the MRSA outbreak.
Your briefing packet includes the following documents:
Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia (NHS)
Staphylococcus aureus epidemiology (UKHSA)
Tong SY, Davis JS, Eichenberger E, Holland TL, Fowler VG Jr. Staphylococcus aureus infections: epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical manifestations, and management. Clin Microbiol Rev. 2015 Jul;28(3):603-61.
Lawes T, Edwards B, López-Lozano JM, Gould I. Trends in Staphylococcus aureus bacteraemia and impacts of infection control practices including universal MRSA admission screening in a hospital in Scotland, 2006-2010: retrospective cohort study and time-series intervention analysis. BMJ Open. 2012 Jun 8;2(3):e000797.
You are an epidemiologist working for Public Health Scotland, sent to Malleith to help with the MRSA outbreak.
A team of scientists working together have in a PHS lab have isolated and cultured MRSA from a number of patient samples taken during this outbreak; isolated genomic DNA from cultures of these isolates; sequenced this DNA using an Illumina MiSeq platform; assembled the short paired-end reads; and compared these assemblies to the extant Staphylococcus aureus sequences available in the NCBI databases. The results of these experiments are summarised in the table below.
| Patient | NCBI accession of closest database match |
|---|---|
| 1 | GCA_003595405.1 |
| 2 | GCA_003595465.1 |
| 3 | GCA_002000805.1 |
| 4 | GCA_003595405.1 |
| 5 | GCA_002000805.1 |
| 6 | GCA_002000805.1 |
| 7 | GCA_013836525.1 |
| 8 | GCA_003595405.1 |
| 9 | GCA_003595465.1 |
| 10 | GCA_003595465.1 |
Your briefing packet also includes the following documents:
text x1, citation x1
Reuter, Sandra et al. “Building a genomic framework for prospective MRSA surveillance in the United Kingdom and the Republic of Ireland.” Genome research vol. 26,2 (2016): 263-70.
You are the director of Malleith’s main hospital, the Central Highland, which has 500 beds across 10 different wards and 10 operating theatres.
Figure 6: The Central Highland hospital in Malleith. Image credit: [DALL-E
The annual operating budget for financial year 2021-2022 was £1.7 million, and average expenditures are shown by category in the figure below.
Figure 7: Hospital expenditures by category for financial year 2021-2022 (Source: NHS Scotland)
The Central Highland has units specialising in maternity care; dermatology; paediatrics; an ear, nose, and throat clinic; an eye clinic; and an orthopedic unit.
There are currently 23 ICU beds (with ventilators) available, an increase from the 18 ICU beds in the Central Highland in November 2019. Average ICU bed occupancy before and during the COVID-19 pandemic is in the figure below.
Figure 8: ICU bed occupancy for the Malleith Central Highland hospital (Source: NHS Scotland)
There are approximately 1.5m admissions to the Central Highland hospital annually, the majority of these being to the emergency (A&E) department.
Figure 9: Admissions to the Malleith Central Highland hospital by category (Source: NHS Scotland)
A&E waiting times have been called “outrageously high” in recent months, both by the press and by the hospital ombudsman.
Figure 10: ICU waiting times for the Malleith Central Highland hospital (Source: NHS Scotland)
The Central Highland has been set a goal of 25% reduction in sepsis mortality (compared to past years)and 50% reduction in the nosocomial transmission of superbugs such as methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA), Clostridiodes difficile (C. diff), and Candida auris (C. auris).
Figure 11: Key Performance Indicators (KPIs) related to infectious diseases for the Malleith Central Highland hospital (Source: NHS Scotland)
There are currently 148 patients in the Central Highland with confirmed or suspected MRSA, with 16 of these patients currently in the ICU.
The hospital follows the guidelines set out in the National Infection Prevention and Control Manual.
You are a civil servant working in Malleith, working closely with the provost, city council and various agencies including the NHS, the UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA), and the Scottish Environment Protection Agency (SEPA).
Some of the key Malleith facts and figures at a glance are summarized in the table below.
| Community Amenities | Details |
|---|---|
| Schools | 7 primary schools, 3 secondary schools, 1 college |
| Care Homes | 3, each with ~30 bed capacity |
| Restaurants and Cafes | 93 |
| Parks and Playgrounds | 12 |
| Economic Indicators | Details |
| GDP/capita | £42177 |
| Unemployment Rate | 3% |
| Traffic and Transport | Details |
| Traffic fatalities (average/month) | 11 |
Your briefing packet on MRSA includes the following information.
Health protection in children and young people settings, including education
Infection control in the built environment
MRSA guidelines (Healthcare Infection Society) ***
You are a microbiologist working in the virology department at the Greater Malleith Clinical Laboratory. Your laboratory is equipped to handle a range of culture samples (including anaerobic and microaerobic bacteria, as well as viruses), and you routinely process1606 samples monthly.
You are familiar with the culture requirements for growth of MRSA in the laboratory, and the UK Standards for Microbiology Investigations (SMI) for identification of Staphylococcus.
Figure 12: MRSA grown on Mannitol Salt Agar (MSA). Image credit: CDC
Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA): Laboratory esting (CDC)
Hunt AC, Edwards B, Girvan EK, Cosgrove B, Edwards GF, Gould IM. Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus in Northeastern Scotland in 2003 to 2007: evolving strain distribution and resistance patterns. J Clin Microbiol. 2011 May;49(5):1975-8.
Giulieri SG, Tong SYC, Williamson DA. Using genomics to understand meticillin- and vancomycin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus infections. Microb Genom. 2020 Jan;6(1):e000324.
You are a public communications expert, often employed by the Malleith city council to manage the PR response to different initiatives or crises. You have assembled the following information/resources for this meeting:
Dickmann P, Keeping S, Döring N, Schmidt AE, Binder C, Ariño-Blasco S, Gil J. Communicating the Risk of MRSA: The Role of Clinical Practice, Regulation and Other Policies in Five European Countries. Front Public Health. 2017 Mar 17;5:44.
Mason, Thuy et al. “Knowledge and awareness of the general public and perception of pharmacists about antibiotic resistance.” BMC public health vol. 18,1 711. 8 Jun. 2018.
Djerf-Pierre, Monika, and Mia Lindgren. “Making sense of”superbugs" on YouTube: A storytelling approach.” Public understanding of science (Bristol, England) vol. 30,5 (2021): 535-551.
You are one of the doctors at the largest surgery in Malleith. In the past fortnight, 64 of your patients have recently presented to the surgery with symptoms consistent with MRSA. You have therefore recently been familiarising yourself with the relevant literature:
Scottish One Health Antimicrobial Use and Antimicrobial Resistance in 2021
MRSA Standard Operating Procedure (SOP)(NHSGGC)
Turner, Nicholas A et al. “Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus: an overview of basic and clinical research.” Nature reviews. Microbiology vol. 17,4 (2019): 203-218.
Brown, Nicholas M et al. “Treatment of methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA): updated guidelines from the UK.” JAC-antimicrobial resistance vol. 3,1 dlaa114. 3 Feb. 2021, doi:10.1093/jacamr/dlaa114
Adalbert, Jenna R et al. “Clinical outcomes in patients co-infected with COVID-19 and Staphylococcus aureus: a scoping review.” BMC infectious diseases vol. 21,1 985. 21 Sep. 2021.